A survey of Central and Eastern European cinema
Friday November 22nd 2024

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Kinoteka

London's sixth annual Polish Film Festiwal (sic) has just launched its website.Given London's already large and growing Polish population, the festival has grown to match, and now has several distinct sidebars including:New Polish Cinema - several new features and shorts, including Stanislaw Mucha's Hope (Nadzieja), which I recently reviewed for [...]

Electra My Love

Electra My Love

Szerelmem, Elektra Hungary, 1974, colour, 71 mins There was always something inevitable about Miklós Jancsó's Electra My Love (a literal translation of the Hungarian Szerelmem, Elektra, though it's also known as Elektreia). In the films from The Confrontation (Fényes szelek, 1968) to Red Psalm (Még kér a nép, 1971), he had been refining [...]

Red Psalm

Red Psalm

Még kér a nép Hungary, 1971, colour, 84 minsCurrent DVD availability makes it easy to trace Miklós Jancsó's career from his second feature Cantata (Oldás és kötes, 1963) to his sixth Silence and Cry (Csend és kiáltás, 1967) inclusive. But then there's a hiatus, with The Confrontation (Fényes szelek, 1968) and the Italian-made La [...]

Silence and Cry

Silence and Cry

Csend és kiáltás Hungary, 1967, black and white, 76 minsBoth made and set in the same year as The Red and the White (Csillagosok, katonák) - 1967 and 1919 respectively - Silence and Cry returns to the puszta - that great flat Hungarian plain stretching out to infinity - that Miklós Jancsó made such an indelible part of The Round-Up [...]

The Red and the White

The Red and the White

Csillagosok, katonák Hungary/USSR, 1967, black and white, 90 minsSuperficially, it's easy to see why the Soviet Union thought that Miklós Jancsó would be the man to direct a Hungarian-Soviet co-production commemorating the October Revolution's 50th anniversary. With My Way Home, made just eight years after the 1956 uprising, he'd portrayed a [...]

Všechno nejlepší!

Had he not died in 1983, yesterday would have been the 86th birthday of the great Zdeněk Liška, unarguably the greatest of all Czech film-score composers, and someone who for my money ranks alongside the likes of Bernard Herrmann and Ennio Morricone for his instantly recognisable blend of tireless innovation (both musically and sonically) and [...]

Jancsó in London

Last Friday evening I went to the Curzon Mayfair cinema in central London for an ultra-rare screening of Miklós Jancsó's masterpiece The Round-Up (Szegénylegények, 1965) in the company of its director - who, it turned out, was watching the film for the first time in nearly thirty years. As promised, it was indeed in 35mm, albeit in an old [...]

The Round-Up

The Round-Up

Szegénylegények Hungary, 1965, black and white, 87 minsIt's appropriate that Miklós Jancsó took inspiration for more than one film (Cantata, 1963; Allegro Barbaro, 1979) from the work of his great compatriot Béla Bartók, as in many ways he was attempting to achieve the same with Hungarian cinema as Bartók did with Hungarian music. Though [...]

My Way Home

My Way Home

Így jöttem Hungary, 1964, black and white, 102 minsMiklós Jancsó's third feature My Way Home is a key transitional work in his career. Although still not quite past the embryonic stage, his mature style is now clearly visible, and he's already managed to ditch the Antonioni influence that cast a long shadow over its predecessor Cantata [...]

Cantata

Cantata

Oldás és kötés Hungary, 1963, black and white, 90 minsMiklós Jancsó’s second feature is, to all practical intents and purposes, his debut, since he has all but disowned his first decade’s output - a large number of documentaries plus a 1958 feature The Bells Have Gone To Rome (A harangok Rómában mentek). Although embryonic glimmerings [...]

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